Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115.
Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics, Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Dec 22;117(51):32772-32778. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2001671117. Epub 2020 Dec 8.
Population displacement may occur after natural disasters, permanently altering the demographic composition of the affected regions. Measuring this displacement is vital for both optimal postdisaster resource allocation and calculation of measures of public health interest such as mortality estimates. Here, we analyzed data generated by mobile phones and social media to estimate the weekly island-wide population at risk and within-island geographic heterogeneity of migration in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. We compared these two data sources with population estimates derived from air travel records and census data. We observed a loss of population across all data sources throughout the study period; however, the magnitude and dynamics differ by the data source. Census data predict a population loss of just over 129,000 from July 2017 to July 2018, a 4% decrease; air travel data predict a population loss of 168,295 for the same period, a 5% decrease; mobile phone-based estimates predict a loss of 235,375 from July 2017 to May 2018, an 8% decrease; and social media-based estimates predict a loss of 476,779 from August 2017 to August 2018, a 17% decrease. On average, municipalities with a smaller population size lost a bigger proportion of their population. Moreover, we infer that these municipalities experienced greater infrastructure damage as measured by the proportion of unknown locations stemming from these regions. Finally, our analysis measures a general shift of population from rural to urban centers within the island. Passively collected data provide a promising supplement to current at-risk population estimation procedures; however, each data source has its own biases and limitations.
人口迁移可能会在自然灾害后发生,永久性地改变受灾地区的人口构成。衡量这种迁移对于优化灾后资源分配和计算公共卫生利益措施(如死亡率估计)都至关重要。在这里,我们分析了移动电话和社交媒体生成的数据,以估计波多黎各飓风玛丽亚过后,整个岛屿的风险人口以及岛内迁移的地理异质性。我们将这两个数据源与来自航空旅行记录和人口普查数据的人口估计进行了比较。我们观察到,在整个研究期间,所有数据源的人口都在减少;然而,幅度和动态因数据源而异。人口普查数据预测,从 2017 年 7 月到 2018 年 7 月,人口将减少 129000 多人,即减少 4%;航空旅行数据预测同期人口将减少 168295 人,即减少 5%;基于移动电话的估计预测,从 2017 年 7 月到 2018 年 5 月,人口将减少 235375 人,即减少 8%;基于社交媒体的估计预测,从 2017 年 8 月到 2018 年 8 月,人口将减少 476779 人,即减少 17%。平均而言,人口较少的城市会失去更多的人口。此外,我们推断,这些城市的基础设施遭受了更大的破坏,这一点可以从这些地区未知位置的比例来衡量。最后,我们的分析衡量了人口从农村到岛内城市中心的一般转移。被动收集的数据为当前风险人口估计程序提供了有希望的补充;然而,每个数据源都有其自身的偏差和局限性。